There hasn't been an actual story yet, but over the last 24 hours there have been a few mentions of a forthcoming press conference on Monday that says some N-Word team is going to announce an IndyCar team.

Question: So, what's this about a N****R team coming to Indy this year? (Tim, Xenia)

Answer: Gossip has everyone from Tony Stewart to Robby Gordon, but my sources say John Andretti with Richard Petty Motorsports.

That sounds like a bit of a yawner since John Andretti raced last year at Indy, although racing under the "Richard Petty Motorsports" banner would be noteable. Than again, Richard Petty doesn't own that team, so maybe it's back to being a yawner.

But then things got spiced up today when Mike King added to this rumor. During IMS Radio coverage of this morning's practice session on the streets of St Pete King added (without shouting) "It's somebody that already should have won it."

No offense to John Andretti, but I don't recall an Indy 500 that he should have already won, so that would take his name out of play and put two others in the rumor mill.

First is Robby Gordon, who owns his own team and has done "the double" of competing in both The Greatest Spectacle In Racing and the Soda Pop 600 stock car race that evening. No driver has attempted this 1100-mile feet in recent years because the logistical problems presented after the start of the Indianapolis 500 bumped back to later in the day, but it's not impossible to think Gordon would return. Plus, he nearly won the race in 1999 before running out of fuel on the next to last lap, so he fits King's criteria. Gordon also threatened to take his team to the IndyCar Series last year.

But more newsworthy would be the the idea that Tony Stewart is the guy in question. Smoke held the pole (and at the time a track record) in 1996, and he also did "the double" in his younger, leaner years. But now he's an owner and not just a racer, but one who has recently appeared in a press conference with AJ Foyt, sporting the famed "#14" of Super Tex lore on his Chevy.

If this is going to be a big deal requiring a press conference then the smart money would seem to be on a Hoosier like Stewart, possibly in partnership with Foyt. (Or maybe it's former Truck series driver Paul Tracy since he's 1 to 1 on the press conference to race ratio and almost won the race in 2002.) We can sit around and guess all weekend, but personally I'd just like to see Sam Hornish Jr return over any of the aforementioned.

I'll now do my impression of that kid in "Shane" by yelling "Saaaam! Come baaaack!".

UPDATE: I totally missed this in my email barrage this morning. From the braintrust at TrackSide Online, who I should have read before anyone else. Here are the details, which under the heading of "make his debut as a car owner" would seem to remove Robby Gordon's name from speculation.

A media teleconference will be held Monday, April 6, to announce the car entry of a NASCAR team owner in the 93rd Indianapolis 500 Mile Race set for Sunday, May 24.

The teleconference is set for 3:30 p.m. EDT and will follow a 2 p.m. press conference held in the North Green Room at the base of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway's Pagoda.

The NASCAR team owner will make his debut as a car owner for this year's Indy 500. On May 24, the owner will join past Indy 500-winning team owners Roger Penske and Chip Ganassi as the only team principals with entries in both Memorial Day racing classics, the Indianapolis 500 and the Coca-Cola 600 in Charlotte.

CAVIN WAS RIGHT: And it involves Dreyer & Reinbold.

IndyCar Series sources say that Richard Petty Motorsports, in conjunction with Dreyer and Reinbold Racing, will field a car for John Andretti in this year's Indianapolis 500. A formal announcement is set for Monday at the famed Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

MIKE KING RESPONDS: King just read out loud an email from a fan who asked if John Andretti was the guy and Mike said "This is not the driver and team we were told." So, ladies and gentlemen, re-start your wild-ass speculation.

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AZZO45
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April 03, 2009 12:32 PM

Richard Childress? Has Casey Mears & does co-own a Grand AM team... so multiple series owner could give Indy a try?

With dwindling NASCAR fields Mears could skip Charlotte (or just arrive late) & get into his #07 Cup Ride AFTER Indy???

The driver will not be doing the double, so if it is Mears, or Gordon or any other N***** driver then they wont be running in Charlotte.

Anonymous
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April 03, 2009 1:07 PM

When I hear "..somebody that already should ave won it.", the first name that comes to mind is Lloyd Ruby. Obviously that's out of the question. The second is probably Michael Andretti, but I can't see him driving for anyone other than his own team.

Let's rule out Robby Gordon and Tony Stewart for a second..... How about Paul Tracy?

Remember, Richard Petty Motorsports was Gillett-Evernham Motorsports last year. Basically Petty Enterprises folded and GEM renamed itself that to pander to NASCAR fans. Gillett initially seemed to be an F1-style owner in the sense that he demanded a driver of a certain nationality. Gillett owns the Montreal Canadiens so he wanted a Canadian driver, hence Carpentier. So if the real entry is a George Gillett entry, I'd expect a Canadian, like PT (or Carpentier, or hell, Andrew Ranger). PT wants money and Gillett has it. If it actually is a Petty entry, then yeah, it would probably be Andretti because Andretti drove for Petty before. Andretti is not a chase threat or a threat to fall out of the top 35 (probably), so he would skip the race. I thought Stewart might be interested in running Indy once he left Joe Gibbs...but now that he is a chase threat (which I had honestly not expected in a Haas car), and perhaps only a borderline one, he might choose not to miss Charlotte to protect his points position...

Somebody should move their start time to allow the double again. It would probably increase the ratings of BOTH races more than the current situation does. Indy moved it in the first place, but I know folks here would say Charlotte should...

AZZO45
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April 03, 2009 8:19 PM

Sean: good points, but I believe George Gillette is an AMERICAN business man who owns the NHL Canadians as well as a European soccer club as well.

Gillette has supposedly been effected by the economic downturn... rumors had him selling the NHL team & possibly scaling back his racing efforts. Perhaps he's turned into a big race fan & is really looking to get out of the hockey & non racing interests?

Carpentier was hired on merit/ racing potential (to adapt to NASCAR). PC could be an option at this "RPM" Indy effort... just like Dario returned to OW.

I see Carpentier as an RPM driver over Tracy. Paul strikes me as a guy who wants a more full time deal + a team who could give him a better shot than a "one off" group would seem to offer???